Behind India’s shocking gang rapes lies a deep crisis among young men

theguardian: by Kishwar Desai —

For anyone who maintains that women are raped because of the way they dress or the way they look, the image of two thin and scrawny teenagers hanging from a mango tree, gang raped and murdered by their neighbours in Budaun, Uttar Pradesh, provided a powerful lesson. It was a poignant reminder that, according to the National Crime Records Bureau, incidents of rape in Indiahave gone up tenfold in the last 40 years.

From 1971 to 2012 recorded cases shot up from just under 2,500 to almost 25,000, and activists believe only 10% of cases are actually reported to the police. This rising trend of sexual violence needs to be better understood. And today it was reported that a judge in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, was the victim of an attempted rape in her well-protected home.

The enormous spike in rape incidents has been ascribed, in urban areas, to women joining the workforce and facing aggressive male resistance; and in rural areas to the all-pervasive caste system, as in this case, where the girls belonged to a lower caste than the rapists. But the underlying problems go far wider, and point to a deeper crisis, which India must urgently address.

Uttar Pradesh, where these latest horrific attacks took place, is one of the poorest states in India, with more than 60 million people living on less than a pound a day. At the same time, India is grappling with a lost generation of those who were born after economic liberalisation but are ill-educated, unemployed – and, mostly, male. According to the International Labour Organisation, India saw a growth in joblessness between 2004 and 2009.

Unemployment and poverty are common features among the gangs who rape. In this environment, and within a patriarchal structure, violence is one of the few things that can command respect. As young men become increasingly unable to participate in the “India shining” fairytale, they reassert their identities, and power, in a savage and cruel act.

During the last 10 years, especially, there was an incredibly slow creation of educational and job opportunities. It is no coincidence that many marginalised men, born in the last two or three decades, have reached adolescence or adulthood in the same period as rape incidents began to spiral upwards.

And the police are often willing participants. In the Budaun case, not only were the rapists known to the victims’ family, but two of the suspects are policemen. Indeed, they have sympathisers at an even higher level: the former chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, Mulayam Singh Yadav, said recently about jailed rapists: “Boys will be boys.”

Underlying all this is the fact that around half of India’s population is under 30. And thanks to years of systematic sex selection, a significant majority of them are men. In Uttar Pradesh, for instance, there are just 912 girls for every 1,000 boys. This shortage of young women makes it very difficult for these men to have a normal relationship.

It is now obvious that the important anti-rape law passed last year, after the shocking gang-rape of a young woman on a bus in Delhi, has not been enough: there are too few fast-track courts, and too many criminals are finding it easy to escape identification. They either hunt for younger and younger girls, who are less likely to name them; or, more and more, they kill or torture their victims – by pouring acid into their throats, setting them alight or, as in this case, hanging them.

Of course, it is important to note that rape happens behind closed doors in upper-class homes as well, and we cannot put the blame entirely on these marginalised, ill-educated young men. But as this trend of gang rapes becomes more prevalent, some economic solutions will have to be found to assimilate these increasingly frustrated young men into civil society, and ensure that education and jobs are offered. Otherwise Indian women will continue to pay the price.

Origional Post here:  http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jun/04/india-gang-rapes-deep-crisis-men?CMP=fb_gu

Categories: Asia, India, Men, Poverty, Violence, Women

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